Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 248, Ed. 1 Friday, January 2, 1942 Page: 2 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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(NEA Telephoto)
trepid Texas school in the first quarter of th? game at Miami, Fla.
(NEA TELEPHOTO) ,
Tulsa U. Trims HHS Cagers Meet
x
Sinkwich threw two touch-
Trip Tigers 2-0
FRIDAY, JAN. 2, 1912
The j
Y
/
PROBANLI LINEUPS
20'16 in Thriller
(
points.
sharp-shpoting
line,
Frederick.
fer scores in the final period, but
Laneville held a 23 to 22 lead
back bin arm to let fly a rapier-
tries from the field good and kept his throws were intercepted.
James
A
is about the
of Fordham players after it with in America:’ they saw all predic-
to play after the touchdown and
Size
of Oklahoma history, dancing is right on top of him. The nearest
t > -
when they
neaday night,
FG IT PF TP ’
. 2
the
the
finest
team
clam
ns
Martin, g . ..
1
inski didn't have complete pos-
mavissize
session of the ball despite the fact
9
19
18
47
o-
See LINKMAN on Page 10
FG FT PF TP
The
)
Statement of Condition of
CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
TOTALS
IS
12
13
42
RESOURCES
J
hare of screwy things.
7
10.00
buried
$3,704,201.53
LIABILITIES
as the
a
had
npacily built young man
DOBBS’
F
t ' day's
S5
and
up
Georgia
8-7, and
f
/
sce
«£•
U
______
rem iiMki
Sinkwich Big
Noise in 40-26
Jimmy Nelson
And Breaks
Give Ala. Win
along on his belly, Ritinski clutch-
ed at the ball as he went out of
Mineral Dust Shows
Mountain’s Make Up
Needham’s Quint
Trims Laneville
Missouri player was four or five
yards away.
The question was whether Rit-
line. If he did it was a Fordham
touchdown, if he didn’t it was a
safety. Referee W. T. Holloran of
Providence, R. I., ruled that Rit-
Me'
Buck
duced.
Oregon took the ball 20 seconds
after the kickoff and held it for
Tech
one
Milcy and Brooks
each had 12 points.
lanky,
drew
Tulsa
cane.
other
of
9
21 1
0 ।
0
Warren
< )w ens.
an' old hand at
es. He played in
HAYS
Clothing Store
allowed on the campus during aft-
ernoons and at night throughout
the week.
the
139
the
proved dancing In th estudent un-
ion from 4 p. m. to 10 p. m. to
keep students from going to near
by Oklahoma City for their enter-
tainment.
it i Greo,
. I Switzer,
Thirty-one
torward.
■ forward,
ever
out i
the Yellow Jackets from getting
set.
.. 5
. . 1
2
c
g
FIFTH AVENUE
HATS
.....-4
.. . 1
> r .
Bow to Tide, Georgia Humbles Christians
Needham; f . ..
Collier. C
Wood, g ..........
Brooks, g .....
Goodman, g .....
his .
"I
Capital Stock _______________________
Surplus .. ..................
Undivided Profits.......—
Reserve for Contingencies .......
Reserve for Dividends ............
Dividend Checks Outstanding
Deposits ...............................-.....
HENDERSON, TEXAS
At the close of business December 31, 1941
irtes and 29 seconds of the first for for years or within 1,000 miles
period, and most of the throng ' of North Carolina, two teams may
Saves Ribbon Spools
SACRAMENTO (UP)
BY TOM W. MILLER
United Press Staff
DALLAS (UP)—Here s a foot.
way.
d w n
. almost 15 minutes while march-
| mg 52 yards for a 7-0 first period
lead gained by Bob Durdan’s 15-
MMTEMMMMMademmzaa-e--TFm"
GEORGIA TRIMS T. C. U.— Georgia University’s Bulldogs, after building up a 40-7 lead
early in the third quarter, saw that lead cut to 14 points as Texas Christian staged a three-
touchdown rally. Photo shows TCU back, Kyle Gillespie, scoring 1st touchdown for the in-
$3,704,201.53
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
"The Appreciative and Dependable Bank"
-12
p,
BY JACK GUENTHER
United Press Staff
DURHAM, N. C. (UP) —- Some
How d
l iailred, ci
I
TOTALS . »
Laneville (42).
Player—
Miley, f
B-e
A
DIREI TORS
E. R, Alford
John R. Alford
Rede Kangerga
D. W. March
R. F. Shaw
Clyde Strong
W. E. Wylie
--0--
Read Classified Ads. It Pays.
12
. 3
fl
5
1-2
4
I
0
2
5
1
0
0
2
4
4
2
0
1
..... 4
...... 2
...... 2
.... 10
0
0
2
t
2
1
4
2
1
3
1
2
4
2
...... $2,133,206.32
....... 197,075.00
_____ 5,200.00
........ 775,694.01
...... 559.516.20
26,500.00
........ 7,000.00
DUNCANNON.
Thieves cracked
r-
IT fe ITO
New Y
Aggies
---,---O—------
“Okie” Is Youngest
Great-Grandmother
()
Capitol Lawn to Be
Site of an Oil Well
। the 12 points only tempered the.
sting of defeat.
er
Durham campus
F
F
(
(
G
wrong direction. Eisan was quar-
terback on that California eleven,
so you can be sure he has seen
i Conger and the other to
. (1
Eastern Basketball
m.t
Lions play the Jclf Davis high
10 ' school basketball team in the HHS
Lowly Lineman
Star as Rams
here recently and found it 'empty
On the same night, they cracked
a 1′4 ton safe in the office of a
I novelty factory. It was empty. So
the thieves penciled htis note on
the safe door: "A big safe, but
nothing in it. Another night shot
to pieces ’’
sport/home
,g
,1
The redoubtable Sinkwich. how-
ever, immediately offset this by
"printing 43 yards to the goal line
resulting in a touchdown. Then,
too, the Tide made the breaks
it cashed in on by recovering five
of A. & M.'s six fumbles on the
cold, hard turf.
ed by one Glen Dobbs and
ers, cach got six points in their
battle for honors.
Jeff Davis won the "B" game,
37 to 24.
OFFICERS
John R Alford, President
W E. Wylie. Vice-President
D. W. March, Vice-President
Ben R. Thomason, Vice-Pres-Cashier
Alvin Wylie, Assistant Cashier
John Wright, Assistant Cashier
A
- Houston Team Has
Height Advantage
firt football game you
50 cents. I feel like a
in which "ho dog
EL PASO, Tex. (UP)
Panther guard, was the big gun
for Coach Roy Needha m‘s club.
He sank 10 field goals, aji on one-
handed shots from around the foul
ever has pro-
beneath Mt. Washington.-
Tredinnick, a Mt.. Washington
Flub employe, has been scooping ,
tin small quantities of rock par-
University Golden Hurri-
and one charity toss. Buck ! on a fake . pass.
of Laneville The Texans, warming to the
' task, completed two more Serinis
i .
Cash and Due From Banks .....
U. S. Government Bonds ~—
Federal Reserve Bank Stock.........
Other Bonds and Securities ________
Loans and Discounts ______.
Banking House .........
Furniture and Fixtures ________________
Other Real Estate
(Ten Farms) .......... —......
more heart-stopping game than
the Rose Bowl football classic of
1942 but don't try to tell it to
anyone in Durham.
There are over 200 classified
causes of death, according to the
Census. .
got WHS
thef."
Eisan
by the
hrewd .
he will
one himself. That was the 1929
#
-
.b.
. 632ahand
Okla . tailback
Martin Ruby, the giant Aggie
tackle who played a whale of .a
game and enlisted in the Naval
Air Corps during the half, sum-
Lions
Wylie
B. Duran
Brad;
I’roprs
(. Duran
anywhere in the state of North
i Carolina.
of its own to tie matters up at
7-7.
With the score knotted at the
start of the second half, the
yard climax romp. A dozen min-
utes later Duke reeled off 70
yards for a score and a conversion
at the
station
state of California la making a
special contribution to national
defense by saving the typewriter
ribbon spools formerly discarded. ■
The state department of finance
estimated about 7,000 spools were
thrown away each month through-
out the state.
its a heated contrst, with the two ,
tennis about evenly matched. Hen- । Kelley,
dorson has an edge in speed which I " irecn,
may more than offset the Jeff i
of fighting niad boys prove once
again the old theory that a team
which won't be beaten just can't
be beaten.
The official score is Oregon
State 20. Duke 16. but that doesn't
tell how the orphaned champions
of the Pacific coast turned back
happened. Even those who did see
the play didn't quite understand
it.
From its own 10-yard line Mis-
souri was trying to punt out. Don
Greenwood, Tigers’ substitute end
and best kicker, was back to
kick from the end zone. Rain was
falling in torrents. Somehow Alex
Santilli, 195-pound « tackle from
a safe
just told me.
daughter was married at 1 1.
ALABAMA EDGES OUT AGGIES — Craft (18) Alabama, goes over the goal line on a
reverse from the 8-yard line for the fir l Alai ama score in the Cotton Bowl in Dallas. Do-
| reports that 105,802 homes have
—maybe be, ore.
Frank Thomas, coach of the
Crimson, said "Jimmy played the
greatest game of his career," but
Alabama was not all Nelson, nor
who worked
of 73,000 peering through a thick possibly piny a harder, faster or
curtain of rain, didn't see what
Byers. g ....
i Salibo, g .....
skilled end for 24 and Bob Deth-
man passed 20 more to George
Zellick for the score, and once
mineral dust. may soon reveal
Stanley Ritinski,
from Luzerne, Pa
ing the muddy
WASHINGTON (UP) Thai
OEM Defense Housing division j
passes—one to End
E-
tnat not a single dog showed up
to be shooed from the stadium.
And I feel sorry that I gyvped
Chaves. We always toss a silver
collar before the opening kickoff,
but ' you just can't find those
things in the East-and all ('haves
a total of 241 yards. Four of
saw plenty of interesting
e.
• 5 a -A *
times the
again Warren Simas booted the
extra point.
A second time Duke came back Q
and, aided by a 24-yard penalty to
the O.S.C. one, drew even again
at 14-14. But here is where the
lowly Beavers showed their met-
tle. Within two minutes they drew
away for the third and last time.
It wasDethman pitching again,
this time on a 62-yard pass play
to Gray, and the safety scored by
Duke in the last 10 minutes didn't-------------'
matter. 1
All the story can’t be told in
that scoring summary, but you '
can get the idea from the facts
that the ball changed hands 12
times on fumbles or interceptions;
that Durdan and Steve Lach of
Duke averaged 46.4 and 47.8 yards ,
on punts despite a steady rain;
and that O. S. C. rolled up 302
yards and Duke 295. '
Oregon State roared homeward i
today, the first Rose Bowl ap- (
pearance — odd though it was—
Slater Marfin.
erough. •
Alabama’s pass defense paid
off in seven interceptions, one
\ rd w ho l . I | an ? He i - the
• RRETTON WOODS. N H
prehistoric rock
Day classic I f ween
a successful one. There were
heroes aplenty— Quentin Green-
ough, Martin Chaves, Bill Halver-
’ encounter when
was good and TCU • was ahead
7-6,
But from there on, the Geor-
gians had things almost their own
kjick-offanebsmacked into Oregon
., ........... .before ’the Reavers were set.
be forgotten hore is m telling what might
because Roy Reigals. ran in thelhave happened."
ranked an underdog at 1-3 upset
Then there was a mad scramble the second highest scoring team
185-pound end tions of a strictly defensive battle
.. finally reach- ; exploded; and they saw a bunch
oval. Skidding
i Bow L football game, .—
mid . up and down ) oecurences during my stint yes-
terday, too,' he said with a grin
1 but I still can't quite believe
P-m*
*3 C X dosseg
38083 388888888
1*
• - , ■'. •
O. S. C. and Duke and one of
the four gentlemnen who knows
more ahout that particular
than all tie publicized experts
you can collect.'
tried it up:
"Three things beat us Jim
Nelson, our fumbles and our
passes tha fell in their hands
But mostly it was Nelson I guess
jou could say he put the full-
Nelson on us."
tides, brought tn the peak's sur-,rince January, 200,510 such hom.
face during drilling operations „ have gone into construction i rIn out on
for water GoolngLst, hope the The total number of dormitorv I which } ou ’
mineral dust will disclose the nnits to he occupied bv single I
mountains unknown rock com- I defense worker. has reacled
Pos ion. • ti 185, the division said
Federal funds have been allot
l fed for 126,259 defense homes.
-— ——— o ---------
Safecrackers Protest
Recovering Lamar Dayis’ fumble I
| on the Bulldogs 22, the Texans I
I Massed and battered their way
to the four where Kyle Gillespie. I
I UU’s star quarterhack, rammed
shown in the it over Frank Medanich’s kick
ctiff Kimsey, before the period
2: ded and the Bulldogs were in
front, 19-7.
Georgia didn't lose its scoring
momentum in the second period
and in short order Sinkwich
dominated the scene. He passed
to Keuper who bucked his way to
the five and in n single piny went
giate Basketball League opens
Jan 9. when (innelt tackles Har-
vard in Cambridge .
(Up;—The hobby of Frank Tre-
dinnick, head waiter, who collects
wasn't impressed merely
minor items. He is a
student" of football and
say flatly that the Rose
Vvz I
4• enderson Bail Netus j
Hende1 son's pint-sized
cver. Before the half ended, the
LANEVILLE. (Spl.) fourth- Bulldogs scored again, this time
quarter scoring splurge by Jeff । on a pass from Jim Todd to Dati
Davis paitnd the louring Houston . Revived by the rest between t •
lagers out in front of Laneville hai ves the Texans came back o while two lowly linemen, carry
la ,t night as they won 47 to 42 “he sun-drenched field and took around the major share of glory
At one point in the third quarter to, the air with a success that was for leading Fordham to a 2-0 vie-
the Panthers had trailed by eight definitely lacking in the early tory over Missouri.
.......* stages of the game. They scored, The wirring play of yester-
on a pass from Emery Nix to day's Sugai EowI game came with
"ruc Alford.
Tulsa cut off any hopes of a , Buster Duran.
Tech rally by intercepting A PASS , Thc Lions have one s.lvfl.itoge !
on the first play foiling the. ljn that JeffDruis has. played
kickoff. basketbal gameu aircady this
The first three periods wor weck. while Henderson partici
scoreless, with Texas lechs stub- pated in only one.
born goal line stands turning ...
back constant Tulsa threats Both । 1,1 yesterday ■'< workout the
teams got close enough to try 1on8 showed no slackening from
field goals, but the attempts fail- thcir PuCe in the
ed.
in J N K GI ESTHER
I lilted Press Staff
DIRHAM, N. C. (UP) Sup-
startling suddenness after 5 min- day and somewhere, maybe not
NEW YORK. Forty-two-game
schedule of Eastern Inter-colle- |
'haded Catifornia
vhich never will
J 2*3.
#829 c»
that has stood
ing to ■ the world in general,
"brother, I've. seen and heard
everything now; so help me."
And maybe they have, too.
They saw a twice beaten team
_ the Duke eleven .which won the
a. Dr. Joseph A. Brandt, former nstorehnd .postsvorntne stha zan snatnernueconrarmppas ttinmath
8 newspaper city editor and new line If he Hid it was a Fordham - -- e-e-t tnm •h
6 president of the’ institution, ap-
Arp game Wed- i The box score:
rn they ran up Jeff Davis (47).
ria? er.—
Owens, 4
Switzer, f ...
4$ 100,000:00 •
.. 97,500,00-
._ 91,253.8845
50,000.00 F
112,000.00
600.02
3.372,847.63
gym. with the “B" battle starting
at 7:00 p.m.
Massey saw the Panthers trim
Laneville last night without being
like pass and 20 times he eon- -foreed to work at top speed and
nected. But it wasn't until the , was kmpressed by Roy Needham’s
final quarter of the game thatlouton club
those passes produced the touch- I The Tanthers will have,a height
down that enabled Tulsa to beat adynntjjge over the Lions, and also
Censiis record show that 164.737
more men than women died in
1910.
| Jeff Davis
host team has gone down to de- i owens
feat. There has been only one ex- j Switzer
ception, and that was when j Kelley
Arizona State Teachers College/creen
of Tempe played Catholic Univer- .Martin
gity of Washington, D. C., to a
scoreless tie on the first day of] Coach , uy Masscy told the Hen.
1 940 ’
-—- derson Lions today that- they are
in for a lot of trouble tonight. The
PA (UP)
I know? Well, a dark-
led I
ball poser:
How can a team he outrushed i
115 yards to 59, he ou.assed
194 yards to 16. be outstripped
in first downs 13 to 1—and still
win and win decisively?
And herr’s the answer: Give]
the team a few breaks and a
climax runner like Jimmy Nelson
to cash in on them.
Alabama'* Crimson Tide rolled
homeward today with its fifth
victory in seven bowl appearances. I
a 29 to 21 Cotton Bowl triumph
o'er Texas A & M., which had
never lost a bowl game before.
The Aggies had the statistics
i’ll their way, but still they were
Eisan explained "Oregon needed :
game omething like that to pen it up
I been built or are under eon - posing you had spent the after-
phnetion to provide living quar : on right smack «n the middle
ters for families of defense work - 0! the I,
ers and enlisted personnel, runi liv.
During the week ending Nov j he sideline . hearing the quarter-
29, 2,785 new homes were finish backs call signal , and watching
I ed. Coordinator Charles F. Palmer "very move of every lineman -
i reported, bringing the total num: what thinEs do >ou think you
her completed or occupied to would emember best when all
36 581. ahe huhbhub was omi'? _
FHA-inspecter privately financ. You den't know 1 Well, I do.
ed homes started during the ’ ‘U woult emember that this
same week (ot ailed 3.831. nndM
OKLAHOMA fFFF—tFP}----
The advice to build your house
on rock and stay away from
shifting sands has been discounted
in Oklahoma. The capitol was
built on sand many years ago and j
it turned out to be the Wilcox
oil sand, one of the most pro-
duct i\e ever discovered.
Now, the state is getting ready
to drill an oil well in a petunia
bed just south of the capitol
entrance. The well will be drilled
at an angle so that it will strike
strike hottom between,the offices
of Gov. .Leon Phillips and Su-
peme Court Justice Earl Welch
some 5.900 feet down.
----------o----
More Than 105,000
Defense Homes Built
the field and one in
cheated Martin Chaves,
'lie captain of Oregon State Col-
1. gc- out of all cents cash because
cu couldn't find a silver doar
and the boys really went to
town. Duke was ail primed to
tike the offensive at once. That's
why the Blue Deyils elected to
receive. If they, had kept that
Orange jersied boys from the far
northwest went to work again to
the complete surprise of the spec-
tators. This time Gene Gray
BY JACK WOLISTON
United Press Stafr
MIAMI (UP) - Frankie Sink-
wich, his accurate passing arm
and speedy feet, gave the Univer-
sity of Georgia its smashing 40-
26 victory over Texas Christian
University in the most colorful.
' hrill-packed football game in
< range Bowl history.
Sinkwich took command on the
opening play, before 35,5(15 grid-
.ion fans. The 180-pound all-
in erican halfback's running and
passing set up the first Georgia
touchdpwn scored by Ken Keuper
afte six plays.
Texas Christian took a short-
lived lead a few minutes later.
pitalizing on a Georgia error. ,
For as Tobacco Town slowly
settled back to normal today after
the most hectic week in- all its
history, some 56,000 citizens are
still busily rubbing their eyes,
feeling their pulses and remark-
was the game all Alabama.
,TTheAsgipAsan sitlxihthen "tue 1 Texas Tech 6t ...... Te haven- more esuuxienced basket-
nation this last fall, threw more I The touchdown toss or 0 ne
rasses than a bowl team ever did that began on.the.Tech.1. 1. ’ " as
before. But although their three tanr: i ■ -
touchdowns were either directly Judd, who shot off two tacklers Panther team lid Kelley,
or indirectly the result of those and was away. Dobbs' attempted conter. Slater Martin rind Valton
paeses--13 completed of 42—-the conversion was blocked, but itGreon, the .guards, mid
■„ It M. overhead attack was not didn't matter. .
There was only two minutes left the
Pennsylvania Railroad
-
Egsww*R . ..
Emrgaa 32 -x2r33ss
.52 """
!
Eiaan thinks that the Rose
game waa the fastest, cleanest
and most intensely fought he can
recall and that it is probably the
most exciting Rose contest he has
seen, played in 'or refereed. It
was so grim he says, the boys
didn't even waste time arguing
decisions.
They prepared to rock and sock
each other-rather than debate."
"If I had to pick individual
players I'd say Don Durhan and
Chaves were the standouts for
Oregon and Steve Lach and Pete
Goddard for Duke," he said. "But
I can’t remember when I've seen
better all around tackling or
i unting on any ball field. And
I think ©regon was very lucky
to have been nipped for that
safety. If the Beavers hadn't been
c tught on that and gotten the
free kick, Duke could easily have
scored."
Although he lost five pounds
raring about— he figures the 500
pames he has worked had cost him
about 2,500 pounds in all—-he
doesn't believe the game proved
a thing alout the merits of the
Pacific Coast and Southern Con-
fi rences The game is played too,
long after the close of the season
for that.
"But I'm still worried about
t’,e lack of a dog,” he grinned. |
"Why, without the crowd to bon !
and cheer me as I tailed after
cne nf those critters I felt
positively lonely." I
Thirty-one personal fouls were
called in the game anil three play-
ers " I eft the coni' t.
Jeff Davis' superiority was
manifest in the shooting statistics.
The Panthers made most of their
। ball team.
j Massey was troubled over stop-
taken in on the 15 by End Saxon ping four good-sized boys on the"
big
and excelled in virtually every | E‘ei ett,, Mas • smashed through
I other department. ’ | Missouri a left aide and hurled he
I Sinkwich attempted 13 passes chest in front of the ball as it
••nd completed nine of them for came bounding off Greenwood's
- - • - ■ - • toe.
Y 62
2- -4684
51 points.
Ma sey foresaw tonight’s game
Ree FOOTBALL on Page 10 ds
HI, ' '■
) kr
- 1 K
dmhuaatag32 *
Rout of T.C.U.
I __________________________
BAKERSFIELD, Cal. (UP)—
An "Okie" at the Arvin Migratory
Camp, whirl was made famous
by references to it in John Stein
beck’s novel, "The Grapes of
Wrath." is hailed as the youngest
gient-grandmother in the United
States.
She is 45-year-old Mrs Frank .
Ppkin. She is the mother of 13
children, has 14 grandchildren
and a great-granddaughter. More-
over, ahe sings folk songs well
enough to make recordings for
the Library of Congress.
Mrs. Pipkin, a native of Shaw-
nee, Okla., was married when she
was 13 years old. Her eldest j
Bowl game might"have been won
•mil lost in the first play. That
aas the opening kick-off. Three
Oregon men hit Duke's receiver,
Mommy Davis, so hard that he
fumbled State: recovered, Mid
from that point on dominated the
game.
"That was A tremendous lift."
sucked under by the Tide, whose
big pull was Jimmy Nelson.
This is what the fleet halfback j
did: . . ,manovich (45) Ala.; Simmons (82) A. & AL; Webster (30) A. & M. areals
He ran back a punt Yares
to a touchdown through the whole picture.
A. & M. team, weaving and twint-
anr, tacklers slipping off him like
• cunty fair contestants trying to
nold a greased pig.
at half-time, and moved into an
eight-point lead midway of thestatisties showed that Sinkwich
thud quarter. Then, in the finalsingle-handedly outgained
frame Warren Switzer, Martinentire TCU team, totaling
and \ niton Green started hitting I vards rushing to 101 for
th buchet. Horned Frogs. The Georgians
I ee Fisan
se How] ।
ee
-aE
He bruised his way, with little
n: Tech Score6-0 Jeff Davis Tonight
cick-maneuvered reverse to an- ______ ____ ___ I •
other touchdown without a hand
being put on him. Ron Bowl jinx
He also did the Alabama punt- since the border conference took
11.2 tossed the one pass that [over the job of furnishing the
accounted for the Tide’s 16 aerialthost team Krinned again today,
sards and did his part of inter- For more years than the con-
C’.pting seven of the 42 passes ; ference likes to remember the
the Aggies attempted. _ ,
They call Nelson Old Tater
Head” supposedly because of the
shape of his head, but he’s really
just a modest, soft-spoken, black
haired young athlete from the
little town of Live Oak, Florida,
who wants to help I ncle Sam s
armed forces rather than go on I yesterday it was Texas Tech
hi football as a professional. | that took the licking, administer-
The Cotton Bowl game was his
last for Alabama and the six foot,
180-pounder says he wants to do
physical instructor work in the
army after he gets out of school
----------0----
Big Ed Kelley of the panthers Oklahoma Univertity
andGranHHe- otter of-the ark- ; Lifts Ban on Dancing
i ets staged a stand-off duel. The : ___
two big boys, ordinarily high scor- NORMAN Okla (UP) For the
NoMAMrKa tut") for tne the field of play. Steve Hudacek,
first time in 50 years of University Ram left tackle, and Santilli were
2 a'-
kuedmzesxa2228j.
BY GEORGE KIRKSEY "adE rWo
United Press Staff 1
NEW ORLEANS, (UP) — Re- A Ci. _L KX 72.
member those hard-hitting, fast- | B004M fl l W 126
stepping backs who were going *- ■ • E • l • •VV¥* V V • 1 ••
to turn the Sugar Bowl game inte —
a touchdown carnival? Well, they
are still mired in the mud today
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Henderson Daily News (Henderson, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 248, Ed. 1 Friday, January 2, 1942, newspaper, January 2, 1942; Henderson, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1497088/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed May 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Rusk County Library.